All our Hungarian interpreters are suitably qualified and have been vetted by our Project Managers at our head office. Often they also have an individual specialist subject knowledge.

If you need a Hungarian interpreter with a particular level of clearance such as a DBS Enhanced Certificate, Police clearance or a Home Office Counter Terrorist check, just let us know and we will arrange the closest available interpreter for you.

Our Hungarian translators only translate into their mother tongue. They also have specialist subject knowledge so they can combine linguistic skill with expertise in the subject area. This combination means translations are both technically accurate and culturally astute.

Knockhundred Translations provides translation and interpreting services in over 190 languages besides Hungarian. You can see a full list of languages that we interpret and translate here.

Do you have a Hungarian certificate or official document that needs translating and/or certifying?

Quite interesting facts about the Hungarian language

Hungarian is an Ugric language with about 13 million speakers (in 2012) in Hungary (Magyarország), Romania, Serbia, Ukraine and Slovakia. There are also many people of Hungarian origin in the UK and other European countries, the USA, Canada and Australia.

Hungarian is a highly inflected language in which nouns can have up to 238 possible forms. It is related to Mansi, an Ob-Ugric language with about 4,000 speakers who live in the eastern Urals, and Khanty or Ostyak, the other Ob-Ugric language which is spoken by about 15,000 people in the Ob valley of western Siberia.

The earliest written text in Hungarian was a funeral oration (halotti beszéd) written in 1196, and the first complete book to be printed in Hungarian, Az zenth Paal leueley magyar nyeluen (The letters of Saint Paul in the Hungarian language) by Benedek Komjáti, was published in 1533 in Kraków in Poland. Hungarian literature flourished during the 18th and 19th centuries.